US poised to attack Imam Ali shrine

In a NY Times article titled “U.S. Forces, Close to Attack in Najaf, Suddenly Pull Back”, we are told:

The delay came after a day of intense preparation for the attack, with a convoy of tanks and armored vehicles leaving its base.

Officers declined to discuss why they did not go ahead with the attack.

“Preparations to do the offensive are taking longer than initially anticipated,” said Maj. David Holahan, second in command of the Marine battalion in Najaf.

“We never said what time we would do it.”

But a known concern of the American military is that fighting in Najaf’s old city, where many of Mr. Sadr’s guerrillas are hiding, could damage the shrine of Imam Ali, one of the holiest sites in Shia Islam.

Damage to the mosque by either side could provoke immense anger among Iraq’s 15 million Shiites, and marines and soldiers have been told that the consequences could be catastrophic.

Any attack must still be approved by Ayad Allawi, Iraq’s prime minister. Officers said they could not disclose whether Mr. Allawi had delayed the attack.

A couple of points about this “attack” which has been “authorized” by the US-appointed governor of Najaf. First, it is extremely stupid to assume that Allawi or the “governor” authorizing the desecration of the most revered shrine in Shi`a Islam will get the Americans who actually enter the shrine off the hook with the millions of Shi`a who will hate them for this. Second, the Times article tells us that there are 5,000 American troops involved in this folly in Najaf. These five thousand troops are surrounded by millions of Iraqi Shi`a, who, granted, are ill-equipped to take on the armored and heavily armed Americans, but are likely to be willing to be martyred in large numbers. Should it come to pass that the US slaughters large numbers of Shi`a who will certainly confront them over the desecration of their holy shrine, the entire Middle East could be consumed in the conflict that would ensue. To get a sense of just how enraged many Iraqis are becoming over this debacle so far, see this article:

Protesters set fire to Allawi’s party offices

Thousands of Iraqis in the southern city of Nassiriya calling for the fall of Prime Minister Iyad Allawi, have set fire to the local office of his political party.

The demonstrators are enraged by military action against Shiite rebels in the sacred city of Najaf.

They have screamed: “Down, down Allawi” and “Allawi you coward, you American agent”.

They have held up posters of Moqtada al-Sadr, the firebrand Shiite cleric whose militiamen have been challenging US and Iraqi forces in Najaf for seven straight days.

Nassiriya is one of the seven cities where the Shiite uprising has erupted in the past week – the biggest challenge to Mr Allawi’s interim Government since it took over from the US occupation authority in late June.

The bloodiest fighting is taking place in Najaf, where US helicopter gunships and warplanes have pounded rebel positions.

Any harm to holy sites in the city would enrage millions of Shiites in Iraq and other countries.

Meanwhile, Grand Ayatollah Ali Sistani hides out in London, where it becomes more apparent daily that he was removed from Najaf in order to allow the crushing of the Sadrist rebels. I cannot see how this wouldn’t be interpreted as cowardice and collaboration with the Occupiers.

zeyad at Healing Iraq argues against “conspiracy theories” which hold that Sistani was forcibly removed from Najaf by the occupation authorities:

Some people have been claiming that Sistani was flown away to London to ‘remove’ him from the scene in Najaf against his will. They underestimate the power of a supreme Hawza cleric, if Sistani wished, he could quite easily issue a fatwa or a statement from his hospital bed against the US actions. A supreme marji’ can’t easily be intimidated or silenced. They forget that Sayyid Mohammed Taqi Al-Shirazi issued the fatwa that sparked the massive 1920 uprising against the British while he was on his death bed, and he did indeed die days later but the revolt did not.

This argument seems even more damaging to Sistani in that he most pointedly has not issued a fatwa, nor has he made any comment on the situation in Najaf, which leads one to the conclusion that he approves of the attack on the Imam Ali Shrine. How can a Shi`a Grand Ayatollah not speak up about the desecration of the most holy shrine of his religion?

Juan Cole: The US military actions in the holy city of Najaf are deeply offensive to Muslims throughout the world. Although many might also criticize Sadr and his militia for using the holy sites as cover, the strongest condemnation inevitably is reserved for the foreign troops, seen as imperialists.

Ironic quote of the Day: “We will not allow them to continue to desecrate this sacred site . . . ” said Colonel Anthony Haslam, commanding officer of the 11th Marine Expeditionary Unit. (This is after the US dropped bombs on the cemetery, which contains the dead relatives of Shiite Muslims from all over the world, but especially Iraq).

UPDATE: Al Jazeera reports: Workers at an oil-pumping station in southern Iraq said on Wednesday they have stopped operations in protest against the government’s backing of the US offensive against followers of a-Sadr.

The station in the southern Arab Shia town of Nasiriya cut supplies of refined products and liquefied natural gas to Baghdad, a statement by the workers said.

“We stopped pumping in protest of the inhuman conduct of the interim government and its cooperation with the occupation forces to ransack the holy city of Najaf and insult the Shia, their symbols and holy places,” the statement said.

Iraqi oil officials declined to comment. Clashes between US forces and the Al-Mahdi Army since last week have disrupted fuel and other supplies to Baghdad as roads became more hazardous and petrol stations were looted.

Iraqis threaten breakaway province

Al Jazeera reports that some Iraqi southern governorates will break away from the central government in Baghdad. Apparently this is why the southern Iraqi oil fields are no longer pumping oil to the southern terminal.

Ali Hamud al-Musawi, head of the Misan governorate council, told Aljazeera that the decision of Basra’s Deputy Governor al-Malki is a normal and logical reaction.

“The feelings of Iraqi southerners in particular and Iraqi in general had been despised” al-Musawi said.

“This reaction comes in response to the crimes committed against Iraqis by an illegal and unelected government, and occupation forces who claimed they came to liberate Iraq, but it turned out that they have come to kill Iraqis” he added.

Al-Musawi expressed support for what he described as “our brothers in Basra” and announced that negotiations are going on regarding the activation of the break up.

“We are discussing the decision and we will stop Misan’s oil flow, until Baghdad’s government restores its logic (common sense) and realises that millions of Iraqis care for the people of Najaf and Karbala,” al-Musawi said.

“Iyad Allawi should not expect us to support him,” he said. “We expected this government to give us justice, democracy and freedom,” he added.

Al-Musawi said the interim government did not open communication channels with Iraqis, and used force against them instead.

“We support the unity of Iraq, when there is an Iraqi government that acknowledges all people’s rights,” al-Musawi said.

“The government should not make irresponsible decisions and attack our religion” he added.

Attempts are being made to spin the oil shutoff as a precaution against saboteurs, who are invariably called “Mahdi Army militants” or “supporters of Moqtada al Sadr.”

Najaf: the next Fallujah?

Apparently, the US is going to go Fallujah on Najaf.

U.S. forces urge civilians to leave Najaf

NAJAF, Iraq American forces urged civilians to evacuate the combat zone in Najaf on Tuesday, the sixth day of clashes with Shiite militias that have restricted output from southern Iraqi oil fields and sent world oil prices soaring.

U.S. troops in Humvees drove through the center of the Shiite city, using loudspeakers to call on civilians to evacuate the zone immediately.

Residents said it was the first time U.S. troops had called for a mass evacuation, adding that they feared a massive attack on the Mahdi Army of the radical cleric Moktada al-Sadr in the city’s cemetery, and on the shrine of Imam Ali, one of Shiite Islam’s holiest sites.

Artillery and tank shells earlier pounded positions in the vast cemetery. A thick column of smoke rose from near the Imam Ali shrine, and Iraqi police in trucks were seen heading for the area while U.S. helicopters flew overhead.

A senior U.S. military official said Monday that marines had been given permission to enter the Ali shrine to attack the militants, and that any action taken would be “on the order and direction of the governor.”

As if a “governor” could give permission for the holiest shrine in Shi`a Islam to be desecrated. Right.

This might actually end up worse than Fallujah.

Chalabi’s counterfeit currency swap

Juan Cole, discussing the arrest warrant out for Ahmed Chalabi asks,He was charged with counterfeiting old Iraqi dinars (why not counterfeit new dinars if you were going to counterfeit?) and money-laundering.

Chalabi counterfeited Iraqi dinars and exchanged them for new dinars during the currency swap, when the CPA replaced the old dinar with the new one. From Jason Vest:

Perhaps the most interesting strand of the investigation involves one Sabbah Nouri, an INC official whom Chalabi had installed in the Ministry of Finance earlier this year — and who’s virtually the star of a front-page story in today’s generally Chalabi-friendly New York Sun.

Nouri has not been a particularly high-profile figure, but he could end up being the demolition man for Chalabi’s political aspirations and the INC. Identified in a January 13 broadcast of the Voice of the Mujahideen (the short-wave program of the Shia Supreme Islamic Council for Revolution in Iraq) as the “director of the finance minister’s office,” Nouri popped up in a March 11 Washington Post story about millions of missing Iraqi dinars from Iraqi banks.

After Iraqis traded their old dinars for new ones late last year, a Finance Ministry bank audit revealed a $22 million gap. According to the Post, the Finance Ministry quickly rounded up scores of bank tellers, whom it accused of accepting counterfeit scrip or outright theft. Though lawyers for the accused noted that suspects extended beyond tellers, Nouri, identified as “head of the Finance Ministry’s bank audit committee,” asserted that “it was impossible that anyone but the cashiers could have inserted forged bills or taken some of the money,” adding that “in the past, employees did not have any respect for law. We want to teach people this respect.”

Nouri returns to the pages of the Post today (May 21) — which fails to reference its earlier story — and is now identified as being “at the center of the inquiry” into “a scheme to defraud the Iraqi government during the transition to a new currency.” According to the Post, Nouri was “arrested in April and faces 17 charges including extortion, fraud, embezzlement, theft of government property and abuse of authority.”

Similarly, the Times identifies Nouri as having been “arrested on corruption allegations that include stealing a dozen cars from the [Finance] Ministry” and standing accused of “theft, extortion, kidnapping and murder.”

But the most thorough description of the Nouri investigation comes — perhaps somewhat surprisingly — in a front-page story Friday in the neocon’s paper of record, The New York Sun.

According to that report, Nouri has told Iraqi investigators that “Mr Chalabi’s organization instructed him to strong-arm bureaucrats and steal government property.” Citing Nouri’s arrest date as March 24, the story also reveals that his charges include “coerc[ing] confessions from bank tellers” in the dinar investigation, and that when arrested, he attempted to extricate himself by invoking the name of Aras Habib, the INC’s intelligence director.

From the Sunday Times, May 31, 2004:

The way judge Zuhair Maleki related the story last week, a routine investigation into a giant currency fiddle eventually led to a heavily guarded Baghdad compound belonging to Ahmad Chalabi, the former London banker whose high-level US connections had eased him into a prominent role on the interim Iraqi Governing Council.

As the chief investigative judge of Iraq’s central criminal court, Maleki was in charge of a curious case involving one of Chalabi’s minions. Sabah Nouri, described by Maleki as a “former driver and smuggler with no qualifications”, had been appointed to head an audit committee at the Iraqi finance ministry, which fell under Chalabi’s council wing.

When evidence emerged that old dinars sent for burning were being switched with counterfeit bills – and that the genuine dinars were being represented in exchange for more dollars – Nouri apparently set off in hot pursuit of culprits.

This seemingly innocuous investigation into alleged currency fraud ultimately led Iraqi police to kick down the door to Chalabi’s home, rousing him from his bed and provoking a startling political row over whether the man the Pentagon once regarded as its best friend in Iraq was spying for Iran.

The tangled tale of Nouri’s currency shenanigans and Chalabi’s supposed dealings with Tehran reflects much that has gone wrong with the coalition effort in Iraq.

Under the pressure of the approaching June 30 deadline for the handover to civilian rule in Baghdad, Iraqi factions are scrambling for power almost as furiously as rival branches of the US administration are blaming each other for the mess. No one seems to agree on who is friend or foe.

According to Maleki and other sources, Nouri responded to reports of the currency fiddle by storming into several Baghdad banks and seizing female tellers suspected of skimming profits. Nouri “roughed up the girls, abused them verbally and dragged them out of the banks”, said Maleki. “He violated and exceeded his powers.”

When Maleki followed up complaints that the bank tellers had been kidnapped, the scam began to unravel. After weeks of further investigation, the judge concluded that Nouri and other Chalabi aides had in fact been running the counterfeit currency switch.

The question is, why now? Why both Chalabis?

UPDATE: Lew Rockwell on the LRC blog: It was fun to hear Chalabi interviewed by FOX, which holds that this great man is being persecuted for his anti-UN virtues. When asked about the charge of counterfeiting old (i.e. Saddam) dinars, Chalabi said it was an outrageous and politically motivated charge, and besides, “the amount was trivial.”

Wanted: Ahmad and Salem Chalabi

 

BAGHDAD, Iraq (AP) _ A judge says Iraq has issued an arrest warrant for Ahmad Chalabi (AHK’-mahd SHAH’-lah-bee), a former governing council member, on money laundering charges.

And Iraq’s chief investigating judge says a warrant has been issued for Salem Chalabi (SAH’-lem CHAH’-lah-bee), the head of Iraq’s special tribunal, on murder charges.

 

I have no idea who this “judge” is or if it is The Puppets behind these charges or the US, so this is FYI only.